Hope ya enjoyed, still learning to write in a new direction here. Sorry if not much happened.
Perhaps we should add "Cerebus Syndrome" to the tags.
Hope ya enjoyed, still learning to write in a new direction here. Sorry if not much happened.
That bad eh.
Nah, we'd need at least 2 major art shifts to be Cerebrus Syndrome.
I usually consider being compared to Cerberus a bad thing in any case.Nah, we'd need at least 2 major art shifts to be Cerebrus Syndrome.
I usually consider being compared to Cerberus a bad thing in any case.
I'm aware. I've just usually seen it as a negative thing.Look, that's what TvTropes refers to "Lighthearted work that undergoes serious tone shift".
Cerebrus Syndrome is one of those things that got used a lot by a lot of of early 2000's media all at once, usually poorly. Mostly because we had a rush of young writers and artists at that time, and so they made mistakes. It's not a bad thing by itself, it just got a bad reputation.
Yeah, pretty sure TVtrope includes that for Cerberus. syndrome.That's not what's going on here anyway. The story has made it clear Bearen hasn't been doing well for a long time, characters like Brynhild had their own troubled past, and that's not to mention what's going on in Fearen right now. Cerebrus Syndrome would require for this to have a longish period of low stakes, light hearted, and disconnected story beats. Here it's clear there were deeper themes at play for a long while, it simply did the smart thing and made the time to introduce the characters and get us invested in them. It's also always been a fully structured story. It has room for lots of monster girl shenanigans and D&D style mini adventures, but they serve as character building and fun diversions. There's still the clear over arching story, and the small bits are because of it.
Though apart from that bit of semantics I agree: this is the trope done right.TVTropes said:It can also be intentional, with the lighter mood at the beginning allowing readers to meet and become attached to the characters before the story arcs with the dramatic elements begin.
Whether to hear her out or walk away, she can't really hurt him.